Monday, March 31, 2014

There are quite a few reasons why I like conventions - the chance to meet new gamers, play new games or old games in new ways, and cool stuff to buy (i'll show off my awesome new dragon dice holder in another blog post). But there are also reasons why I dislike conventions. Besides travel hassles and potential marital strife, it can be very distracting. Noise, people walking by, interruptions for one reason or another, etc. Just the sheer openness. God help you if you're the least bit agoraphobic, claustrophobic, or misanthropic.

The first game I signed up for was Mazes & Minotaurs. By the way, I was about 24 hours late signing up for games online, so a lot of the popular and/or much anticipated games were already taken. Shortly after dealing with hotel registration problems, I sat down early at the M&M table. It was in a big room. Lots of people. Fairly loud. I imagined what 3.5 hours of that would be like and shuddered.

The GM seemed like a nice guy but he admitted within the first couple minutes that he had some kind of bug - maybe it was food poisoning, a migraine, or a virus. He wasn't sure, but he may need to leave for the bathroom and puke. I was sitting right next to him as there were only 3 players. I'm not an extreme case, but I'll admit that I'm a bit of a germ-phobe or whatever you want to call it. After 10 minutes, I made my excuses and left the game. I talked to some of the M&M players later in the day and the game broke up shortly after I left. No one said it was my fault, but blamed it on the sick GM.

I'll pin this one on the GM's frail condition, but that 10 minute session started out pretty weak. We got to pick from a handful of characters. Not familiar with the system, we got to see the class and a couple skills, equipment list, and various numbers which meant little to us noobs. Then we were supposed to buy equipment before this journey which we've already started on or were about to arrive at our destination. Nothing specific, nothing definite... it began with a whimper and who knows, it might have jumped in with swords clanking and sandals covered in gorgon blood, but I doubt it.

I vowed that when it was my turn, I would be authoritative, interesting, and quick to get to the good stuff.

Back to the hotel reservation. I won't bore you with the details. In a nutshell, I got bumped to their sister hotel a couple miles up the road. Fine. Checking in, it was a private, fancy, golf course kind of community. I only saw a couple people the whole time I was on the grounds - and those were in the registration office. There was a spacious, swanky common area to lounge around in. Leather couch and sofa, TV, fireplace, and a large round table with 8 tall-back leather chairs.

Hmm, I thought. What a great place to game. Long story short, I decided to run my game right there. Wasn't hard to set up. Got permission. Told the main hotel I needed a shuttle van to bring the group to where I was staying. Told the gamers waiting at my designated table that I had a surprise in store for them.

The game itself? Well, I had been working on The Islands of Purple-Haunted Putrescence for months. It was taking shape. I playtested it a number of times with my home group, but needed something more. I needed to run the near-final version for a group of strangers, ideally in a convention type setting. Gary Con was my chance, and I think it went swimmingly. Which is not to say it went perfect. There were flaws, shortcomings, things I hadn't thought of. Some I ad-libbed on the spot, others I just used what was written on the page knowing revisions were a-coming.

Even though some of it was shaky, that campaign world lived for just under 4 hours. The purple islands breathed. We had breathed life into it, and the party's experiences changed it forever. For that, I'm extremely grateful. So, thanks again Tracy Jo Barnwell, Jason Warchol, Amy Horton, Adam Thornton, Mark Malone, David Bresson, and especially Guy Fullerton who took a couple pics during the session and furnished me with those names. Somehow, I forgot to collect them myself in the soft violet afterglow of that crazy session. And why the hell didn't I take any pictures?!?

Strictly speaking, it wasn't your typical "con game". No, it was the first session of a wilderness hex crawl campaign using Swords & Wizardry. For those expecting a clear, concise beginning, middle, and end with lots of closure... sorry, folks. That's not what happened.

Those intrepid adventurers will always remember the hot dog rotisserie, the cleric's throat being chewed off by an insane clown (just like in last night's Walking Dead episode!!!), the coincidental dark secret / Devil's bargain / cleric resurrection ruse, and of course the Purple Putrescence itself which was accurately described as "a force of nature." While I got a little feedback post-game, I'd love to have some notes on what worked well, really well, and not at all. Since Saturday afternoon, I've written a couple pages of changes. But the evolution will take time, as well as, other perspectives.

Oh yeah, I got to play Hollow Earth Expedition. An adventure called Frozen Terror. It was a lot of fun and the GM did a good job. John Carpenter's The Thing meets At the Mountains of Madness with a dash of Return of the Living Dead. It was fairly scripted and would have been a perfect game for a convention, except for the fact that it was a two-parter and we never got past the first. Oh well. One of the four players claimed (twice!) that a lady explorer with a jet pack who punched and threw out a Nazi flying a plane, then got in and landed it herself was the single coolest thing that had ever happened in any roleplaying game ever. Which was nice.

Friday, March 21, 2014

Here's part I just in case you're interested in reading my outsider's perspective on the original Star Trek series. Part II is below. Hopefully, I don't trash your beloved episodes too badly. For the most part, I think it's a great show.

"The Apple" - I think this one was pretty good. Not only did I see it about a month ago, but one or both of my kids kept yapping before the end. If memory serves, I watched it twice because the first time around didn't leave me with much of an impression. Pretty much the same story with these ancient episodes: the first few minutes before the credits are intriguing, the problem or dilemma set up during the following minutes is good, then there's several minutes of establishing some kind of mood or explaining the complexities of some civilization or Star Fleet protocol which bogs everything down and just seems to make the time drag on before the real action happens and everything gets interesting again. If we're lucky, there's some kind of closure.

The lizard cave was cool in this one. The race of humanoids looked pretty silly. Sorry, I can't remember anything else noteworthy about "The Apple" Oh yeah, Chekov.

"The Doomsday Machine" - The captain must go down with his ship. Like in Doctor Who, some of the best episodes require a total asshole to work off or against. Commodore Matt Decker fits the bill here.

A lot of theorizing gets the job done - it's some kind of doomsday weapon built as a deterrent or universal suicide machine by someone or something at some point... perhaps. Whatever it is, planets just get in the way and are soon destroyed by the thing.

Everyone wants a crack at harpooning this Moby Dick in space. Somehow, it has a vulnerable spot and using the abandoned starship to implode just inside its maw does the trick. I don't remember seeing this ultimate machine die on screen, but maybe it did. However, I do remember feeling the build-up of rhetoric about how unstoppable it was right up until the moment they stopped it.

"Catspaw" - This is a gothic medieval episode for better or worse. Why a landing party beamed down in the first place, I don't know. But those guys are now missing. The real landing party needs to find them... along with a witch, Uncle Fester / Anton LaVey, skeleton, black cat, and creepy castle full of cobwebs and probably clanky chains.

Magic, zombies, and a magic scepter/transmuter. Apparently, the transmuter made these little bugs into gothic weirdos capable of destroying the Enterprise. Oh yeah, I remember Kirk starting to seduce the witch lady and then not all of a sudden. That pissed her off.

"I, Mudd" - Oh, fuck no! Are you serious? Mudd in another goddamned episode when there are so many other characters and ideas that actually should be revisited? Hey, I love sexy 60's women, too, but this episode is just too ridiculous. Female androids, logic defeats them, Mudd defeated and punished via his nagging wife, the end. Lame.

"Metamorphosis" - I'm not sure which pile this one should go in. Kind of an interesting idea and execution, but not much happens and that time-drag period I mentioned earlier went into high gear in this episode. It's all too coincidental and just when you think Metamorphosis is going in one direction, it goes in another - but not in a cool, spontaneous way.

At least it had that sappy, romantic happy ending which is something I appreciate even though I'm probably the last guy you'd think would appreciate something like that.

"Journey to Babel" - This was a good one. Finally, some more aliens - a couple we've never seen before. The pig-mask guys weren't that awesome, but the blue-white aliens I liked. Spock's dad is being just as much of a dick as you'd assume he would be. Spock's mom is an odd mixture of supportive and unreasonable in her own way.

The diplomacy and what ends up happening is interesting, although Spock's dad almost dying seemed to take up most of the time.

"Friday's Child" - Funny costumes aside, this episode wasn't bad at all. The blonde was hot and the way McCoy dealt with her embodied that 60's sexism that I find endearingly awesome.

Why knock a sleeping man unconscious with a rock? Because that's how it's done, I guess. Oh yeah, and we're treated to an Amish Klingon. Bet you wish you'd thought of that, Encounter Critical! The interplay between honesty and savagery was fascinating, as Spock would say.

"The Deadly Years" - It takes a lot to run a starship like the Enterprise, and being old means that you start to suck... or something like that. Why so much of the episode and that episode's resident asshole spent so much time on a competency hearing instead of finding a way to stop the rapid aging is beyond me. I guess some writer wanted to prove his point.

The saving grace of "The Deadly Years" is the ruse involving that Romulan ship. Nice one, Kirk!

"Obsession" - Kind of a familiar feel to this one, but ultimately successful, I think. Obsession is about some alien life form which Kirk had dealt with before... or maybe he didn't deal with it properly.

Kirk looks back at his actions years ago and reprimands some kid that might have acted a couple seconds too late. The alien looked pretty cool and I liked the honey-sweet scent of it before it struck. However, once it went into space and threatened to invade a bunch of planets or whatever, I kind of threw up my hands. The writer wanted this thing to be "the ultimate killer" just like a dozen other Star Trek episodes. Nope, can't have it both ways pal. This can either be a complex creature on a single planet that the Enterprise crew deals with or something in space that the ship itself has to handle... pick one and stay with it!

"Wolf in the Fold" - Yay, shore leave on a planet where "I dream of Jeanie" girls are belly dancing all the way to the space bank! Scotty's about to finally get some when she's murdered. And then another and another. Finally, the small bald guy with the wuss voice becomes some terrible demon / Jack the Ripper. WTF?!?

This episode is almost worth watching for the sheer gall of the writer responsible.

"The Trouble with Tribbles" - This was pretty good. Lighthearted and fairly interesting. It was meant to be somewhat comedic, so I'm not going to rip on it.

"The Gamesters of Triskelion" - This guy is channeling Anton LaVey even more than the Gothic Avenger (not a real guy). Nice. Between him and the green-haired broad, that's all the episode you need. Plus, there's gladiatorial fighting. And the 3 brains of the operation was a cool reveal and another high point for the episode. Definitely one of the better entries for season 2.

The "what is thing called kissing?" stuff is kind of fun, but after awhile I can see this getting old. Hopefully, it's not repeated too often. And then Kirk just kind of dumps her green-haired ass (her ass doesn't actually have green hair, that I know of). Just like that. In life, there are girls you want to bring back to your starship/planet/civilization and girls you would rather leave behind.

"A Piece of the Action" - Oh man. Leave a thousand books on a planet and no one even bothers to get a library card. Leave just one book and suddenly everyone is slavishly obedient to the text. Bigger than the bible, some gangster story changes the entire culture of a planet into a 1920's gangster... I just can't. Next!

"The Immunity Syndrome" - And now we know where George Lucas got Obi-wan's "a thousand voices crying out at once and then suddenly silenced" shtick. Thanks, Spocks!

Anyway, this one got kind of weird quickly. A negative energy barrier is penetrated after discovering some kind of alien thing that destroyed a Vulcan ship. An 11,000 mile wide amoeba. Spock and McCoy fight over who gets to go on the suicide mission into the amoeba. Spock wins. An anti-matter bomb is created by Scotty and it's bye bye amoeba.

I guess this episode was pretty good. I don't know, there's just something about this show that I like but can't seem to love. Whatever it is, "The Immunity Syndrome" has it in spades.

"A Private Little War" - I remember liking the Klingon in this one. The peaceful "good guys" that Kirk knows are kind of worthless. The most memorable thing is the spicy little savage beauty named Nona. She's the epitome of a Satanic Witch (yes, another Anton LaVey reference). The way she moves, thinks, feels, and uses her feminine wiles to prey upon those she considers usable... fascinating! It's a shame that she jumped from one bed/side to another too many times.

"Return to Tomorrow" - This is another high point. A distress call, an ancient civilization cast in ruin, a plea for help, three survivors in some alien consciousness-receptacle... awesome stuff!

The betrayal is easy to see from a ways off, yet almost impossible to notice when you're right there in it. Plus, the benefits seem to outweigh the danger. I thought the android idea was a good one, but no half-measures for this race. They seem to be all-or-nothing type beings. And so they choose oblivion after some kissing, of course.

"Patterns of Force" - Even though I've always been fascinated by WWII and Nazi Germany, I was still mildly disappointed in this one. It stretches my disbelief too far. Of course, I understand the budgetary limitations... there was probably a perfectly good WWII set with costumes just 50' away. Why not use them? Well, cause then audiences have to sit through "Patterns of Force" decades later. That's why!

But as a moral lesson, it could have been worse.

"By Any Other Name" - This is another good one. Almost two in a row, Star Trek. Are you trying to spoil me? The woman is hot, the aliens are far superior, and it seems there's no escape. Things move really quickly in this episode. Almost too quickly. Before you know it, they're well on their way to the aliens' home planet and the Enterprise crew is reduced to a handful.

Making use of the aliens' human form is an imaginative idea. Although, the getting drunk thing was pretty much comic relief and the make-out sessions seemed a bit corny. Though, the jealousy angle worked.

However, it ends just as swiftly as it began. Suddenly, the aliens see reason, hug it out, and decide they can all live together in one big happy galaxy. Kind of a lame ending to such a cool build up. This one could have been a two-parter and taken its time.

"The Omega Glory" - So many questions! Why are they senseless violet barbarians in the beginning and then persecuted statesmen by the end? Why the communist vs yankee thing? I suppose the episode's resident asshole kind of had an excuse - the planet had vitalizing properties. But it's all just too far fetched for my palate, I'm afraid. C- at best.

"The Ultimate Computer" - I really liked this one. From the start, you can feel Kirk's uneasiness. The audience relates to his possible redundancy. So unfair! However, the M5 super-computer is totally bananas. Yay!

The only thing that pissed me off about this one was the ending. Where was the closure for Kirk and the asshole who called him some useless starship part? Kirk needed to look Commodore Wesley in the eye and tell him that no one could ever take his place. After all, Wesley is almost as culpable as Daystrom for all those tragic deaths. But we don't get that. Instead, we get some banter about gambling, hunches, compassion, and computer logic bullshit. That last 3 minutes we were robbed of might have been the most dramatic and important of the entire season. So, that's a shame the writer never bothered do put it on camera.

"Bread and Circuses" - Should have been called "A Pattern of Lame". We've been treated to this same exact premise many times... and by now it's played out. Plus the late 1960's police uniforms next to Roman togas and machine guns just irritated the hell out of me.

But this is the first time I remember hearing of a "Prime Directive". Makes sense, but doesn't the Enterprise and her crew break that directive like every third episode?

"Assignment: Earth" - Interesting. I think it was mostly successful. Teri Garr was a pleasant surprise. Is that what young women were wearing back then? Fascinating. (Tired of that word yet?) Why is the time period of the episode 1968 when it's supposed to be about something in the future? Were super-power countries like the US about to put nuclear missiles on space platforms? That doesn't make sense to me.

The mystery is decent, but all-in-all this episode feels more like Get Smart or an American version of The Avengers. Not really my cup of tea.

"Spock's Brain" - Primitive cavemen speak English and they have no word for "women"... typical. Overall, I enjoyed this one. Spock has an impressive brain so why not harvest it for a central computer in the bowels of your native planet - again ravaged by nuclear war or something. But this brings up something that bothers me about Star Trek - Spock is too awesome. He has every advantage (strength, constitution, cool ninja like moves, super-intelligence, etc.) and what are his disadvantages? He can't tell a proper joke and is sometimes too loyal or logical. Really? It's like Spock is Superman and everyone else is Hawkeye or Jimmy Olson. Kind of ridiculous.

Anyway, as much as I'm amused by the idea of hot, scifi-scantily clad women with the reasoning capacity of a child, I just can't get behind the concept. It's like the Eloi from The Time Machine had a helmet of brilliant ideas and just used it often enough to keep the air circulating and the water running. Doesn't add up. But nice try, writer. Still better than average.

"The Enterprise Incident" - Most titles are either so vague I can't remember anything about it from the name alone (like this one) or they're hyper-specific and silly like "Spock's Brain".

This is the 2nd episode of season three and my last entry for this post. It's been a bumpy ride. Ok, let's get to it.

Has Captain Kirk gone mad? Of course not! There must be either a clever scheme or outside influence of the evil alien kind. Which is it? The former, apparently. At least, the ruse is a good one. And it works. The Romulan cloaking device is stolen right under that Romulan milf's nose. Nice one, Spock. And he seems genuinely sorry that she was deceived in such a manner. So, that's another half-Vulcan power - he's a true gentlemen. Gah! Spock's so awesome I almost hate him!

There's a Vulcan death-grip, too?!? I don't believe it's not real. After all, Spock is too perfect. So perfect that he's displeased with the way Kirk looks with those ears, eyebrows, and hint-of-green eyeshadow. "Get thee to a surgeon, Captain!"

Sunday, March 9, 2014

As you probably gathered from the title, this is a public service announcement for the roleplaying game community. The following is a bit of wisdom that's worked well for me over the past few months. I hope others can benefit from my RPG PSA.

Time is a valuable commodity to some of us, most of us, probably, especially when you've got a spouse, kids, demanding career, other hobbies, etc. I had things I needed to do, RPG related writing, and a limited amount of time to configure them - toss ideas around the old brain box - before putting those thoughts down on paper.

As an experiment, I decided to cut-out my usual talk radio and CD listening on the commute to and from work. It only takes me about 25 minutes to get to work and just a little bit longer than that to get back home due to traffic. My hypothesis was this: starved for distraction, my wandering mind would eventually be forced to focus on some of the things I was trying to formulate RPG-wise and, from that, a few good ideas would materialize.

It worked. Maybe it took 10 minutes of driving without listening to anything but the muffled sounds outside the car (usually much less), but eventually, I thought about game mechanics, NPCs, magic items, monsters, the triumphs and tribulations of previous sessions, something I wanted to try in a future session, the nature of gaming, etc. Most days, by the time I reached my destination I had a little something that made my silent drive worth while. Occasionally, I'm able to solve major problems or come up with a string of neat creations in a row... bing, bing, bing!

So, I encourage you (those, like myself, with a temporal deficiency in their lives) to try it. Rather than doing exactly what I did, take the essence of this experiment and apply it to yourself, to your own situation. There will probably be fleeting moments of discomfort at first - the mind loves its distractions and hates to do without them - however, the price one pays for free floating thoughts is worth it. That liberated imagination can easily (eventually, at the very least) be directed towards gaming, your job, relationships, superhero underwear collecting, or whatever it is you want to think about.

Tuesday, March 4, 2014

Welcome to Strange

I've heard a lot of words being thrown around like "gonzo", "old school", and "weird". Ok, fair enough. I believe Mutant Epoch (after awhile the "The" just gets dropped like a radioactive potato sprouting cybernetic lobster arms with florescent orange tendrils!) has its own tangy flavor and style. In the world of post-apocalyptic tabletop RPGs, it's a force to be reckoned with. But "tangy" is subjective; it depends on the ingredients and the individuals tasting it. Alright, put your splatter-proof bibs on and let's take a look at what goes into this Mutant Epoch's zesty BBQ garlic cheese spread!So many character types! There's no race/class system here. You pick (or more likely, roll) to see if your a trans-human, android, ghost mutant, pure stock human, etc, and then roll on a table determining your pre-adventuring caste (including skills), traits (ability scores), mutations, implants, etc. Even size/weight, whether you're right or left handed (or ambidextrous if you're lucky), and if you can swim worth a damn are taken into consideration. Roll, punk!Traits like strength, perception, and intelligence are used. Nice and old school, though there's something to be said for originality to spice up overly familiar RPG concepts. One thing I particularly liked was the table on generating those traits. Since they go from 1 - 100, I assumed (and have seen it in other games) a player rolls a 1d100 for each one, meaning that a trait or two could be in the 90's while another character could have abysmal scores. Thankfully, there's a table in order to keep things on a more level playing field. And yet, there's plenty of random chance to get a character like none other. That's right, no two PCs in an adventuring party will be exactly the same. The odds are probably a million to 1 against.I've read a number of ME reviews that go extensively into character creation, rolling for mutations, etc. So, I'm not going to do that here... or am I? In this case, I feel its justified since going through PC generation is one of the primary reasons for picking ME up.

Drowg the Super-Handsome, a Human/Horse Assassin

We start by rolling on the Character Type table. There are three options, I'm going with the middle one, "Experienced Player". My result is a 65, which means I'm a... Bestial Human. No! That's the one I kind of didn't want. Oh well, the dice decide. I shall be their obedient vessel.Now Trait rolling... Endurance: [37] raw % roll was 62Strength: [18] raw % roll was 14 (Ouch, guess he's not going to be wrestling mutants in the slave pits. Pity.)Agility: [79] raw % roll was 96 (Awesome! He may not be strong, but he's quick... perhaps slippery? Because of my high roll, my result was actually 60 + 1d20. I rolled a 19.)Accuracy: [29] raw % roll was 46 (Pretty average.)Intelligence: [59] I rolled an 83 which translated into 40 + 1d20. (Yes, another 19. I'm on fire today!)Perception: [21] I rolled a 21Willpower: [50] I rolled an 84 which translated into 40 + 1d20 (rolled a 10.)Appearance: [118] Wow, I rolled a natural 100 which translated into 100 +1d20. (He's a real looker! Seriously, not making this rolls up. This is the first time I've rolled these dice. They came out of the Lamentations of the Flame Princess grindhouse box. Thanks, James!)

Pre-Game Caste: I rolled a 61... Assassin. Cool! Now, the Bestial Human table... 73. That means horse. What? Between my Caste and Human/Horse genetics, I get quite a few favorable modifiers to my Traits. A whopping + 57 to Endurance! Can that be right? +25 to strength? Another 21 points added to my appearance of 118?!? Jesus Mutant Christ! Additionally, there's only a 50% that drugs will affect me and a 5% chance that the opposite effect will happen.Being an assassin gives me the following skills: martial arts and knife throwing were automatic. Lying, pick pocket, dodge, unarmed combat, and wilderness survival I rolled for (wilderness survival I already had one skill point in because I'm half horse). Also, I have black ninja gear... I guess it's tailor fitted for my immense stature. Oh yeah, that's another thing. Everything is in meters, centimeters, kilograms, and all those measurements alien to Americans. Well, I know I'm big. That's enough.I had a 33% chance of having some mutations, but rolled too high for that. :( No ability to read/write. Ok, let's look at Trait Value Modifiers... 94 Endurance means my healing rate is 9. That's how many hit points I can regain naturally each day. My damage bonus is +2 and range of throwing things is +10%. Agility Defense Value is -10 and then another -7 for being half horse and then -5 because of my dodge skill (that means I take away 22 points from people attacking me). My Strike Value is +2. I'm also right handed and a strong swimmer.Because I'm Rank 1 (Ranks are pretty much like levels). I have a 50-50 chance of hitting something, but then it's modified by my +2. So, everything I want to try and hit someone, I roll a percentile and if it comes anywhere between 01 and 52, I hit. If my opponent has a Defense Value of -10, then I would only hit with a roll of 01 to 42.As you can see, this is one crazy motherfucking system. Pretty cool, but involved. Lots of rolling, chart consultation, and modifiers up the wazoo! Nifty in theory, but I won't know how it works in practice until my group actually plays ME.I can see that rolling 6 characters is going to take about half of our 4 hour game session. At least the remaining 2 hours can get be action packed, trying out combat and exploring a ruined city.

Back to the Review

Some concepts were not intuitive (for me). Endurance is a trait and that number also doubles as a character's hit points, I assume. When I run it (and I'm really looking forward to that day), I'll probably drop some of the non-essential stuff like complicated combat moves and the type of over-complications which bog down the first few sessions when everyone is learning the rules. Not everything is spelled out but it tries to think of everything. ME bills itself as an RPG for experienced players. Noobs are welcome, but are advised to watch and learn from those who've been around the block of ruins. This is the Outland system - expect an eye-gouge before that blonde mutant with the nice boobs opens up all three of her legs for you. Novice GMs should prepare themselves for some growing pains.There's a lot of tables, many arbitrary percentages for likely narratives - your former owner wants his slave back, etc. Sometimes, you're rolling on a table to get a random number of things (which you roll) in order to find out how many times and in which categories you roll on a brand new table. Not a deal-breaker, obviously, but if you detest that sort of thing, then perhaps ME isn't for you.For many, the layout might be a disadvantage. The type is a bit small (a youtube reviewer claimed he had to read the entire book with a magnifying glass!), though I didn't have any trouble reading it, and quite a bit seems kind of run together without nice paragraph breaks separating them for a cleaner look. But the good news is that its 240 pages would come to something like 320 in most RPG books. A lot of text, tables, and artwork. Let's talk about that. The artwork is pretty awesome. Some of it is a little cartoon-y or juvenile, but most illustrations fit the genre. Art throughout the book - everywhere! Of course, some of the images are pretty small, like 2" x 2", 1" x 3", or even 1" x 1", making it difficult to see any detail or even appreciate how cool a certain creature, mutant, or weapon is.People compare ME to Gamma World. I never had the pleasure of running, reading, nor playing GW, so it's hard for me to say. However, some of ME reminds me of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles and Other Strangeness RPG along with a sourcebook called After The Bomb. Freaky human/animal mutant hybrids scavenging for fuel, food, and weapons in a post-nuclear wasteland. I'm not sure if Gamma World or similar RPGs include magic, but ME doesn't. There are psionic powers and hi-tech relics which seem magical to some, but this is not a scifi-fantasy post-modern mix like Shadowrun or Rifts. However, an introductory paragraph or two suggests that would be a cool addition to the game. Also, the creator, William McAusland, says there's a fantasy RPG using the Outland System coming out soon.ME has hazard checks (saving throws), weapon codes, unlooted corpse classifications, a random hit location table (with only 1 in 20 chance of "torso"?), quite a few mentions of prostitution, erotic art practitioners, and sex-bots, as well as, quite a few tips on forming a campaign. GMs need it, too, because the post-apocalyptic genre just doesn't have as many ready made, go-to ideas as standard fantasy or scifi. There's probably only a dozen fantastic post-apocalyptic films I can think of - not all of them will be inspirational regarding the GM's particular campaign. Hundreds, if you count traditional scifi or fantasy.There are some typos, but that just comes with the territory. Alright, I think that pretty much covers it. The ME website has a lot of cool stuff, including a members only area accessible once you email Mr. McAusland with the code at the back of your book or PDF. Basically, this is a sweet (and tangy) post-apocalypse RPG if you like that sorta thing. Maybe a bit too Gygaxian for some, but those who want AD&D with laser eyes, chainsaw hands, crab claws, and tentacles should get more than their money's worth. It's not a perfect fit for everyone, but a few will absolutely love this!VS

Saturday, March 1, 2014

Got halfway through True Detective tonight. In some sick world that's probably a kind of victory. Kids won't sleep. I think they might be allergic to it. Oh well, at least it gives me the chance to update my old school gaming blog.

Anyways, earlier today was our first time with Hollow Earth Expedition [HEX]. Virgin blood. Had some trouble getting the original hardcover edition of the book. It's been out of print for a little while, but with amazon's help I now have both the travel sized softcover and a mint condition hardcover with the colored end papers and character archetype plates - better than mint, actually. My used copy is signed by Jeff Combos. Whoever you are, "Jen," thank you.

Onto the game! Rather than do the easy thing, which, in this case, would be running the introductory adventure at the back of the book, I decided to "do my own thing". The outsider's curse. It took me until the night before to come up with something decent. HEX's game world environment is simultaneously specific and vague. I love that, but sometimes I struggle to find a purchase on the slippery setting. From the moment I read about dinosaurs, Nazi occultism, mad scientists, 1930's, and the lost city of Atlantis, I knew Lovecraft would have to be involved.

I decided to do a HEX makeover/hack of "The Pits of Bendal-Dolum" - a Call of Cthulhu adventure from the Cthulhu Classics scenario book by Chaosium. Old school. The middle was almost identical, but the beginning and ending took on drastic changes...

The Beginning

The memoirs of Jasper Hedrick were published a decade ago. Hedrick was a small-time explorer back in his day. His primary claim to fame was an expedition to Baaldum-Jale, a temple devoted to the forgotten gods. However, his editor, Lawrence Talbot, made sure it was barely mentioned in an effort to preserve Hedrick's credibility. "An account bordering on the fantastical." he said.

A fortnight ago, Mr. Talbot died. Among his papers were the original notes of Hedrick's central American expedition to Baaldum-Jale, where he observed carvings depicting inhuman creatures, strange phenomena, the practice of black magic, and something he never dared describe at the bottom of a stone stairway containing 777 steps.

A room full of people listened to this new account thanks to the blabbering mouth of Tuffy MacStinson. Normally, that wouldn't be a big deal, but Tuffy spilled the proverbial beans in the drawing room of the Intrepid Explorer's League club. Several expeditions were launched by week's end.

The Middle

Native tribesmen encountered, the survivors of a competing expedition saved, some kind of dread seal or talisman found, a giant Tulu statue marked the temple's perimeter, and nightmares disturbed everyone's slumber. Except for an increase in reptilian aesthetics around the temple, it was a lot like the Call of Cthulhu adventure.

But this is where we got to try the Ubiquity System. Basically, you roll big pools of dice and try to get evens. As GM, I got very few. Everyone else seemed to do fairly well, about average, sometimes better than.

If you think Call of Cthulhu is deadly, holy shit! Playing a Big Game Hunter or Fortune Hunter if you want to see the bodies pile up. The adventurers killed a saber-toothed panther jaguar in 1.5 shots. Later, they took out a traitor/cultist/Hell-plant in a single round. But what do you expect when rolling 14 dice to the defender's 6 or 7.

I believe only 1 Style Point was spent during the game. Unfortunately, I can't even remember what it was for. But a few of the players really hammed it up roleplaying-wise in order to get them. The Christian Missionary was the best. At every turn, he had a sermon ready or a passage from the bible - the guy even brought an old beat-up bible to the game!

The End

After the demonic vegetation burst out of the cultist's back, the Thule Society wandered in suggesting a combined expedition. They had a man in their group who had actually been to the hollow earth before and was pretty sure this would be a way back. Plus, they had a special girl with them; she was physically blind but also a spiritual medium.

Boldly stealing from Star Trek, the super-expedition climbed down the Cyclopean steps only to find a de-materialization area for beaming people down to where the action is. They went. Jungle again but more exotic... and dangerous. PCs saw their first T-Rex, the missionary befriended an Ape-Man, convincing him to let everyone into the Atlantean ruins. That's where the session ended.

Experience points were given. I can't remember if it's in the rules, but I allowed players to use their unused Style Points as XP if they wanted.

"How was it?" That's a question I frequently ask since I've started running new games on a regular basis (new to me and my players, that is). Because sitting behind the screen - figuratively, because the HEX GM screen is harder to find than a solid night of sleep at my house - doesn't tell me everything. Even though I try my best to gauge player actions, reactions, expectations, verbal and non verbal cues, etc... sometimes you just don't know until you ask. Not that you always get an honest answer, but it's better than guessing. The verdict? Everything had fun, liked the system, and wanted to keep playing.

After session #2, I'll end at a good stopping point, ask people if they want to continue playing HEX or move on to something new... like The Mutant Epoch. Thanks for reading. Feel free to comment. I enjoy the feedback.

VS

p.s. After session #2, I have some fresh insight into HEX: given enough time and enthusiasm (especially when fueled by an awesome idea), the PCs will pretty much be able to do anything they want within the setting's context and never die.

It would have been nice if the introductory text had said that up-front, but I got there in the end. That's how this style of game should go and that's what the system facilitates. Once the GM is aware of this, the game noticeably improves for all.

If your players are tired of scrounging and scavenging for a +1 sword, constantly trying to survive battles with giants, dragons, and wizards, then they'd probably enjoy a little vacation. Give them some well-deserved R&R. Run HEX. Somewhere between 1 and 3 sessions should do the trick.